In Shadow Man, Margaret Chula brings her father out of the shadows where he had been since 1957, the day her mother packed their five children-all under the age of ten-into the car and drove away. Over the years, Margaret comes to accept the differences between a mother who wants China cups with saucers and a father who's content with a Budweiser. Through writing about these awkward, often heartbreaking, interactions with her estranged father, she discovers that there's more than one truth and that each of us must find our own. Advance Praise: "Shadow Man is a deeply touching portrayal of…mehr
In Shadow Man, Margaret Chula brings her father out of the shadows where he had been since 1957, the day her mother packed their five children-all under the age of ten-into the car and drove away. Over the years, Margaret comes to accept the differences between a mother who wants China cups with saucers and a father who's content with a Budweiser. Through writing about these awkward, often heartbreaking, interactions with her estranged father, she discovers that there's more than one truth and that each of us must find our own. Advance Praise: "Shadow Man is a deeply touching portrayal of love, loss, and forgiveness." -Penelope Scambly Schott, Oregon Book Award for Poetry "Through Chula's insights, we as readers can understand our own fraught relationships with parents. As adults facing honest memory, we can arrive at the grace of reconciliation that she shows is possible and essential for our own serenity." -Bill Siverly, author of NightfallHinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Margaret Chula has been writing, teaching, and publishing poetry for over forty years. Her books include: Grinding my ink; Shadow Lines (linked haibun with Rich Youmans); Always Filling, Always Full; This Moment; The Smell of Rust; What Remains: Japanese Americans in Internment Camps (with quilt artist Cathy Erickson); Just This; Winter Deepens; Daffodils at Twilight; and One Leaf Detaches. Grants from the Oregon Arts Commission and the Regional Arts and Culture Council have supported her work, as well as fellowships to the Vermont Studio Center, the Helene Wurlitzer Foundation, and Playa at Summer Lake. Maggie has been a featured speaker and workshop leader at conferences throughout the United States, as well as in Poland, Canada, Peru, and Japan. She has also served as president of the Tanka Society of America and as Poet Laureate for Friends of Chamber Music. Living in Kyoto for twelve years, she now makes her home in Portland, Oregon, where she hikes, swims, and creates flower arrangements for every room of the house.
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